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City of Bellingham · Fiscal

Greenways Fund: $57M collected, no public parcel record

Fund 173 — voter-approved Greenway levies funding undisclosed land acquisitions

Bellingham's three voter-approved Greenway levies (II, III, V) have collectively pulled ~$57M into Fund 173 with the same one-line capital-plan authorization pattern as the Watershed Fund — and the same absence of individual-parcel council records.

Active Fiscal City of Bellingham

Greenways V is collecting $9.83M/year (2024-2026 cumulative $28.76M) — roughly 3.4× the pace of its predecessor Greenway III. Like the Watershed Fund, the 6-Year Capital Plan authorizes the spending with a single line; the parcels purchased have not been individually presented to council in any record we've searched.

The Finding

Bellingham's voter-approved Greenways V levy collected $28.76M cumulative 2024-2026 ($9.83M latest year), and the predecessor Greenway III levy collected $28.60M cumulative 2013-2023. Both flow into Greenways Capital Projects Fund (#173). The combined Greenway property-tax inflow over the documented years is roughly $57M.

The fund's primary documented use, per the 6-Year Capital Plan and the city's adopted budget, is land acquisition — buying parcels out of development to add to the public greenway system. Like the Watershed Fund, the Capital Plan authorizes the spending with a single line item; individual parcel acquisitions are not on the council record we have searched.

Two Greenway levies, one fund, no parcel-level governance

The Greenways program has had three voter-approved levies (II, III, V) plus an endowment. Each levy was sold to voters with a specific dollar cap and a stated land-acquisition purpose. Real Record's question:

  • What's the cumulative total collected across all Greenway levies since 1990?
  • How many acres of land have been acquired with that money?
  • What was the average price-per-acre paid, and is that consistent with the city's appraisal data?
  • Are individual parcel acquisitions presented to the council for vote, or pre-authorized via the capital plan (the Watershed pattern)?

Same pattern as Watershed

The structural setup is the pattern we documented in the Watershed Fund slush fund investigation:

  1. Voters approve a dollar cap with a stated purpose (Watershed protection / Greenway acquisition)
  2. The 6-Year Capital Plan authorizes one annual line ("Watershed Acquisitions Annual" / "Greenway Land Acquisitions Annual")
  3. Individual parcel purchases are not on the council record — they're pre-authorized via the capital plan

If the same pattern applies to Greenways, the same governance questions should be asked.

Acceleration

The Greenways V levy started in 2024 and has already collected $28.76M in three years. The Greenway III levy ran for ~10 years (2013-2023) and collected $28.60M total. So Greenways V is collecting roughly 3.4× the per-year rate of Greenways III.

Where to look next

  • How much of the $57M Greenway inflow has been spent (total)?
  • What is the breakdown of spending by category (land vs. trails vs. operations)?
  • What is the reserve / unspent balance in Fund 173 at the end of each fiscal year?
  • Is the capital plan's "Greenway Land Acquisitions Annual" line growing in step with the levy?

Connected on Real Record

The funds, revenue sources, and levies this investigation analyzes — with live cumulative figures from the Real Record database. Click any to see year-by-year detail.

Public records requests to file

If you want to push this further, here are the documents that should be requested under WA Public Records Act (RCW 42.56).
  1. All Bellingham City Council ordinances/resolutions authorizing Greenway land acquisitions, 2014-2025 — same documents we asked for on Watershed.
  2. Greenway acquisition plan or priority list — if one exists.
  3. Appraisal reports for all Greenway acquisitions — proves market-value pricing.
  4. Maps of Greenway-acquired properties 2014-2025.
  5. Fund 173 multi-year revenue + spending detail — the same level of detail we have for Fund 411.

Discussed in meetings

Real Briefings that touch on this investigation's subject.
The Bellingham City Council's Public Works and Natural Resources Committee met on June 15, 2026, to address two items: a formal vote recommending adoption of the 2027–2032 ...
The Bellingham City Council's Parks and Recreation Committee met on June 1, 2026, for a brief afternoon session chaired by Council Member Edwin H. "Skip" Williams. The committee ...
The Bellingham City Council's Public Works and Natural Resources Committee convened on the morning of June 1, 2026, for what proved to be a brief but substantive session covering ...
The Bellingham City Council's Committee of the Whole convened on the afternoon of June 1, 2026, for a brief procedural session immediately preceding that evening's regular City ...
The Bellingham City Council's Community and Economic Development Committee convened on June 1, 2026, for an afternoon session covering two substantive information items: a joint ...
The Bellingham City Planning Commission met on May 21, 2026, for a work session focused on residential zoning strategy. The meeting had no formal action items and no public ...
The Bellingham City Council Budget and Finance Committee convened on May 18, 2026, with three agenda items. The committee was chaired by Council Member Lisa Anderson, with two ...
The Bellingham City Council's May 18, 2026 regular meeting was anchored by a substantive and emotionally resonant presentation from the Keep Washington Working Act (KWW) Advisory ...

Methodology & sources

Levy revenue figures from tax_district_levies (Whatcom County Annual Tax Books). Fund routing is the city's official Chart of Accounts. Comparison to the Watershed pattern is by analogy of authorization structure (one capital-plan line, no individual-parcel council vote in the records we have searched).

How Real Record investigations work: we render the documented spending pattern as published in primary sources (PRR data, CAFRs, capital plans, meeting records). Where the structural pattern is consistent with a finding, we describe it in plain language without editorializing the policy outcome. Public records cited here are available to all; this page is research, not legal opinion.